Ultrasound study in puberphonia.
The role of ultrasound in various office-based laryngeal procedures Transcutaneous laryngeal ultrasonography has been shown to be an encouraging noninvasive device in laryngeal examination that may compliment the current gold standard.
Transcutaneous Laryngeal Ultrasonography allows visualization of important laryngeal structures, namely the thyroid cartilage and pharyngeal phonation structures..
The vocal cords are best seen with an ultrasound transducer placed over the thyroid cartilage on a transverse or short axis view. They appear attached anteriorl...
Vocal cord dysfunction: Ultrasonography-aided diagnosis during routine airway examination
The vocal cord movements during phonation can be visualized real-time using USG.
Here, we present two patients who were incidentally diagnosed to have voca...
Ultrasound, particularly if there is good ultrasound access, allows a dynamic assessment of the vocal cords movement. It is possible to identify an alteration. Corniculate and Cuneiform Cartilages Posterior attachment for vocal folds Pivots medially (adducts) and laterally (abducts) to move vocal folds Attachmen...
vocal folds.
... ability to abduct (move apart) during respiration and to adduct (move together) during phonation makes the vocal folds the point of division between the sub Assessing the vocal folds with an ultrasound is best done with the probe placed in the midline and transverse plane overlying the thyroid cartilage
Technical AspectsLaryngeal Ultrasonography: A Review Observations The ultrasonographic assessment of vocal folds is based on the recognition and observation of one of three structures: false vocal folds, true voca...
A patient with excessive neck adiposity or dense dermis may have impairment of ideal penetration and reflection of sound waves with resultant reduction in image.
Assessment of vocal fold mobility using dynamic magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound in healthy volunteers
Assessment of vocal fold mobility seems to be particularly interesting from a clinical perspective, either in the evaluation of vocal fold paralysis.